Colombia – San AndrĂ©s, a Caribbean island of Afro-Caribbean heritage and a sea of seven colors

San Andrés

Located in the western Caribbean Sea, San Andrés is a Colombian territory in a class of its own. Closer to Nicaragua than to the South American continent, the island has a singular island identity, shaped by its maritime history, Afro-Caribbean culture and strategic role in the region. For travellers, San Andrés represents a structured, clear destination with a strong maritime orientation.

The island covers some 26 km². Its modest size makes it easy to get around and quickly grasp its organization. Coastal roads, residential areas and natural zones follow one another seamlessly, giving the whole a territorial coherence that visitors appreciate.

San Andrés

A Colombian island in the heart of the western Caribbean

Although administratively attached to Colombia, San AndrĂ©s belongs fully to the English-speaking and Creole-speaking Caribbean. The local population, known as raizal, retains cultural traditions linked to the British Caribbean: Creole language, musical and culinary practices, community organization. This hybrid identity – Colombian in administration, Caribbean in culture – is one of the island’s distinguishing features. It is reflected in daily life, trade and religious practices.

It is also a strategic point in the region, located some 190 kilometers off the coast of Nicaragua. This geographical position reinforces its historical and maritime importance in the Western Caribbean.

San Andrés

The sea as a central element

The image most associated with San AndrĂ©s remains that of the “sea of seven colors”. This expression refers to the variations in blue and turquoise visible around the island, linked to the depth of the water, the sandy seabed and the coral reefs. The phenomenon is particularly visible from the east coast and high points along the coastline. The coral reef that partially surrounds the island protects certain areas and supports significant marine biodiversity. The archipelago of San AndrĂ©s, Providencia and Santa Catalina is part of the Seaflower Biosphere Reserve, recognized by UNESCO for its ecological richness.

This close relationship with the sea underpins all aspects of island life: artisanal fishing, maritime transport, nautical activities and seaside tourism.

San Andrés
San Andrés

An accessible, organized region

The main urban center of San AndrĂ©s is built around the port and shopping area. Hotels, shops and services are concentrated along the northern coastline. Residential areas and quieter zones are spread out to the south and inland. The Gustavo Rojas Pinilla international airport provides regular flights to BogotĂ¡, MedellĂ­n, Panama and other regional destinations. This accessibility partly explains the island’s constant tourist numbers.

Despite all this traffic, San Andrés has kept its organization simple: one main road circles the island, making it possible to cover the whole area in just a few hours. This configuration makes it easy to get around and provides a clear overview of the territory.

San Andrés

An economy largely driven by tourism

Tourism is the main economic engine of San Andrés. Hotels, restaurants, nautical activities and duty-free shops structure the local economy. The island benefits from the status of a commercial free zone, which also attracts visitors who come to shop. However, fishing and public services continue to play an important role in the local economy. The cohabitation of tourism and daily life is clearly visible, particularly in the residential areas and markets.

San Andrés

Between frequentation and preservation

The popularity of San AndrĂ©s raises the question of the balance between tourist numbers and the protection of natural resources. Local and national authorities have introduced measures to preserve coral reefs and regulate certain tourist flows. The archipelago’s inclusion in the Seaflower Biosphere Reserve is part of this approach.

For visitors, this translates into a destination that’s alive and kicking, but still easy to understand. The island is more than just a seaside resort: it remains an inhabited territory, with its own rhythms and constraints.

San Andrés
San Andrés

A unique island Caribbean

Highlight San Andrés is to present an island that exemplifies Caribbean diversity. A Colombian territory but with an Afro-Caribbean culture, a tourist destination but an active island space, it combines several dimensions rarely found together in such a small area. For travelers, it offers a clear framework: a compact island, an omnipresent sea and a strong cultural identity. It provides a solid entry point for understanding the Western Caribbean and its interactions between geography, history and tourism.

San Andrés is a Colombian island in the western Caribbean Sea, close to Nicaragua.

It is renowned for its seven-colored sea, coral reefs and membership of the Seaflower Biosphere Reserve.

The island is accessible by air from BogotĂ¡, MedellĂ­n, Panama and several Caribbean cities.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More articles from RK

Zona Colonial
TOURISM
Tolotra

Dominican Republic – Zona Colonial: 1502, the first paved street in the Americas

Zona Colonial, in Santo Domingo, capital of the Dominican Republic, boasts a street billed as the first paved street in the Americas. It’s called “Calle Las Damas”. In the early 16th century, the ladies of the court of MarĂ­a de Toledo, wife of Diego ColĂ³n, used it to walk between the buildings of Spanish power, under the Caribbean sun. The street is still there. It borders the Ozama, the river that flows into the Caribbean Sea. And it provides access to the most densely populated “first-time” district in all of colonial America: the Zona Colonial. A UNESCO-listed founding city Zona Colonial, also known as Ciudad Colonial in the Dominican Republic, was designated aUNESCO World Heritage Site in 1990. Santo Domingo is considered to be the first permanent European city in the Americas. First established on the east bank of the Ozama in 1496, then founded as a colonial city in

Read More »
Patrick Chamoiseau
LITERATURE
Tolotra

Patrick Chamoiseau: the Goncourt voice of Creolité

On November 9 1992, in Paris, the Prix Goncourt jury announced its winner: Patrick Chamoiseau, for “Texaco“. The news crossed the Atlantic. In Fort-de-France, Chamoiseau’s childhood home, it resounded like a major recognition. For the first time since RenĂ© Maran, who won the 1921 Prix Goncourt for Batouala, a West Indian writer received France’s most prestigious literary award. And it’s not just any book: Texaco tells the story of a Martinican lineage through the voice of a woman, in a language that blends French and Creole as if the two had never been separated. A fort-de-française childhood turned into literary material Patrick Chamoiseau was born in Fort-de-France on December 3, 1953. He grew up in the city center, particularly around rue François-Arago, which he would later evoke in Antan d’enfance and Chemin-d’Ă©cole, two of his most tender books. He went on to study law and social economics in France, before

Read More »
Caribbean
TOURISM
Tolotra

The Caribbean, silent antidote to contemporary exhaustion

A global report published in early 2026 by Amadeus reveals what travelers will be looking for in 2026. The Caribbean has always carried it. There’s a precise moment, in a Caribbean village in the early hours of the morning, when the noise of the world seems to stop. The first lights fall on the facades, a voice answers from one courtyard to another, the smell of coffee mingles with that of the nearby sea. Hardly anyone checks their phone. Life is there, in front of us, denser than any notification. This scene, commonplace for anyone who lives in the Caribbean, is precisely what millions of travellers around the world are now looking for. When the world is looking to get off the hook These are the findings of Travel Dreams 2026: From data to delight, a study published in early 2026 by Amadeus, one of the world’s leading technology players

Read More »

conTACT RK

we'd love to have your feedback on your experience so far

Join The List

Join our Richès Karayib community!  Sign up for our newsletter.

Want To Maximize Your Business Presence On Riches Karayib?

Complete the form to start the application